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Orson Welles used these 7 Secrets of Cinematic Composition. Just copy it. 

wolfcrow
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Seven of the most powerful compositional techniques Orson Welles used in his films. Enjoy!
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5 май 2018

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Комментарии : 51   
@vicenteortegarubilar9418
@vicenteortegarubilar9418 6 лет назад
I don't know how you were able to put so much useful information to have a general idea of so many techniques in less than 5 minutes, but you did it. Great video.
@Justin.Martyr
@Justin.Martyr 4 года назад
*NONE of that Shit meant, ANYTHING!!!!*
@Jaychozavri
@Jaychozavri 4 года назад
+1
@omar260271
@omar260271 6 лет назад
Great to see you take on Orson Wells, one of the greatest. Excellent analysis.
@Justin.Martyr
@Justin.Martyr 4 года назад
*So Stupid, was Orson WeLLs, that he LEFT Rita HayWorth!!!!*
@carls.2649
@carls.2649 6 лет назад
Thanks for honoring the master on his birthday with another wonderful video.
@troyphillips1077
@troyphillips1077 6 лет назад
Love your videos, thank you you detail the scenes in ways many would totally miss.
@ValliNayagamChokkalingam
@ValliNayagamChokkalingam 6 лет назад
Awesome!! Loved your analysis of the layers!!!
@balaramanand6639
@balaramanand6639 6 лет назад
...WHATS BEST IS WHEN U TALK ABOUT CAMERA ANGLES U NOT ONLY TALK ABOUT FRAMING AND COMPOSITION BUT TALK ABOUT HOW CINEMATOGRAPHY IS SEAMLESSLY INTEGRATED WITH PRODUCTION DESIGN BEST EXAMPLE IS UR POST ON SERGIO LEONE ......THANKS FOR NEW ONE
@drabs4960
@drabs4960 6 лет назад
Superb man.. I am loving your videos a lot..
@Darrenmcinnes70
@Darrenmcinnes70 6 лет назад
Great video, as usual. Thanks.
@52goldtop
@52goldtop 6 лет назад
Loved this Sareesh, thank you as always -- sincerely appreciate the insight and instruction as well as the great finds. Ps the new 'pointer-fingers' on the screen are great and help a lot with the narrative you're providing.
@MehmetKozal
@MehmetKozal 6 лет назад
Really enjoyed this.
@Joseluispm71
@Joseluispm71 4 года назад
Wow man, what a excellent video!! Congratulations!!!
@sharadkumar8303
@sharadkumar8303 4 года назад
Thank you for an amazing episode 👌
@curtisjudd
@curtisjudd 6 лет назад
Great info, thanks for this!
@riverpinkston8884
@riverpinkston8884 5 лет назад
Jesus Christ that first shot is so fantastic and ahead of its time
@antoniocarlosmendesamerica3936
Excellent!
@AlexMurphyVideos
@AlexMurphyVideos 6 лет назад
Excellent shot breakdown. Welles is the master.
@lizaestevez6928
@lizaestevez6928 5 лет назад
I wonder what Orson Welles style I can,t tell it so hard to describe his style on google or RU-vid and I like that he puts light in foreground and silhouette the background or the reverse very interesting this may be his trademark.
@jimmeskimen
@jimmeskimen 6 лет назад
Thanks for this useful breakdown. The Dutch angle, with movement, is very cool.
@Justin.Martyr
@Justin.Martyr 4 года назад
*Why is it Dutch & not Irish????*
@monwhooperinvasive8064
@monwhooperinvasive8064 6 лет назад
Thank you my friend! Great stuff! What do you think of Abbas Kiarostami? Would be a nice video! Cheers!
@trajan75
@trajan75 6 лет назад
William Wyler shoots a great tracking or long shot at the beginning of The Letter.
@jacobdominguez7808
@jacobdominguez7808 6 лет назад
Happy birthday Orson Welles! 🎂
@plutovenus4101
@plutovenus4101 4 года назад
SUBSCRIBED.
@stefanhamilton8713
@stefanhamilton8713 6 лет назад
Nice
@SatheeshKumar-qg2zl
@SatheeshKumar-qg2zl 4 года назад
Great vid. I was wondering if anyone could help me out on something. What is the technique used to film a scene where, for instance, there are two characters talking to each other. The face of character A is taking half or 3/4 of the screen space and nearest to the screen while the full figure of character B is shown on the remaining portion of screen, standing far away from the former character I found this technique to have been used frequently in old movies, while recently HBOs Watchmen series too used this technique often.
@janardanan3617
@janardanan3617 6 лет назад
Please do a camera angles and composition video on the final sequence of SUICIDE SQUAD..... please
@RanBlakePiano
@RanBlakePiano 4 года назад
Fine!
@rajendrabiswas
@rajendrabiswas 6 лет назад
CITIZEN KANE WAS AMAZNG INSPIRING!! Inspite of tdays technology were is the camera work???
@canturgan
@canturgan 6 лет назад
Even though he is a legend, I think he is a little under appreciated. If he had died young his status would have been secure.
@Justin.Martyr
@Justin.Martyr 4 года назад
*IDIOT!!!!*
@Ax18NY
@Ax18NY 5 лет назад
Orson Welles!
@lizaestevez6928
@lizaestevez6928 6 лет назад
Can you do techniques on Stanley kubrick.
@DC-mm3wy
@DC-mm3wy 6 лет назад
Hi loving the content . I’m a professional camera operator and I have to say you are 100% clued in to what’s important and relevant . Which is not easy with the sea of media content . My personal hate is the over use of shallow depth of field . It’s just a technique however it’s lazy and over used. It takes very little effort . The framing and real compositional skills are lost because of the bokeh obsession we see in photography and video work. Shallow depth of field has its place but like a pan or camera move that’s unmotivated its lazy and jarring . I’d love you to do more videos on the deep shot . On deep composition . Sorry for the rant 😊. What did you think of Mark cousins Story of Film
@wolfcrow
@wolfcrow 6 лет назад
Thank you!
@raymond21st2
@raymond21st2 6 лет назад
There are 2 #3
@franklippert4278
@franklippert4278 4 года назад
Great scenes! But, an aspiring director may just use those techniques indiscriminatorily and achieve little. I think, it wasn't so much the wish for unusual cinematography that facilitated those movie scenes but Orson Welle's experience in theator and staging of scenes there. This and a will for filmic expressionism. As you showed for example, he invented a certain style of "choreography" instead of back and forth cuts in some scenes.
@procamara359
@procamara359 5 лет назад
Can you tell us your favourite list of movies that you think that are very well composed?
@checkeredflagfilms
@checkeredflagfilms 5 лет назад
Gregg Toland the master innovator.
@snehasishguhathakurta9338
@snehasishguhathakurta9338 6 лет назад
Is it only Welles or also the credit should goes to the Cinematogrephers?? I know that after all it's the director's vision that we are watching but in case of the lighting and camera movements, it's not only Welles(the director).
@mrzold
@mrzold 6 лет назад
Check out Bill Dobbins comment, below. It does say something about Welles that he was able to quickly learn from Toland (though credit is due to Toland), and "get it" very quickly then continue to use and expand the vocabulary with great aplomb. This was probably typical of Welles during much of his - at least his early - life, going back to his early years as a brash chubby upstart in the theatre and radio. In terms of influence/inspiration going the other direction, it's great to see Touch of Evil ('58) and compare it with the gorgeous Soviet propaganda movie "I Am Cuba" ("Ya Cuba", "Я Куба", "Soy Cuba") ('64).
@snehasishguhathakurta9338
@snehasishguhathakurta9338 6 лет назад
@CR Green thank you very much for the information. :)
@cllr.johnleahy8990
@cllr.johnleahy8990 5 лет назад
CR Green It's true. As much as Kane is a testament to Toland's technical bravura, and was in a sense an apprenticeship for Welles in the art of film-making, it must be noted that Welles's touch for composition was already there in his minor work Too Much Johnson. And his love of expressionistic lighting was developed in his stage work in the 1930s having learned it in the Gate Theatre in Ireland. The famous Nuremberg lighting of his Julius Caesar for instance., And Welles continued to pursue a consistent, if evolving, visual style in most of his subsequent career, working with a myriad of cinematographers. Everything he learns from Toland he applies flawlessly in Ambersons when he no longer has Toland with him.
@phototenfive9860
@phototenfive9860 6 лет назад
Very good observations, thanks! Shared on Photo Ten Five phototenfive.com/ (PS you have #4 marked as #3)
@billdobb
@billdobb 6 лет назад
Welles was no doubt a genius. But Citizen Kane was his first movie and he knew nothing about cinematography at the time. He learned from and collaborated with DP Greg Toland, who translated Welles' ideas onto film. Welles contained to use and developed what he learned from Toland for the rest of his career. But ascribing the brilliance of so many shots and compositions to Welles alone is a mistake.
@carlonovemespadero5903
@carlonovemespadero5903 5 лет назад
the voice behind "UNICRON"
@Udhbhavana
@Udhbhavana 6 лет назад
Hi, Nice review. But it would be nice of you if you could do a review about the cinematographers that had been used by Alfred Hitchcock. Most of his shots would be long shots, the camera starts from the second floor and follows straight down to the ground floor, where one of his characters would be having the key that is required to open the door, which moves the story further. Though he is a director, his cinematography would be excellent. Its what people basically call Camera Choreography. According to me, the cinematography of Alfred Hitchcock is pretty excellent to the extent that camera also plays a character in his movie. Have you seen my channel ? Please do a review about one footage called "Sootchamam". Waiting for your reply or comment. My whatsapp no is +91 9962867473. Good work. Keep it up. Expecting more reviews from you.
@muratbingul1707
@muratbingul1707 5 лет назад
Bi türkçe çevirisini koysaydınız ölecektiniz deği mi
@Mr_-Heisenberg
@Mr_-Heisenberg 6 лет назад
Great video but why do you sound like you high on weed and got no enthusiasm
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